March 30, 2013

April 13, 2013

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The sports world moves on quickly. Phil Mickelson wins the Family Values Masters. Baseball begins to unwrap. The NBA prepares
for the playoffs. And we await the month—er, the two weeks—of May leading to the Indy 500.

But in the two weeks since the NCAA title game, I can barely go a waking hour without someone asking me The Question.

What if?

What if Gordon Hayward’s shot had gone in? A sports scientist commissioned by ESPN determined that, if the 46-foot
heave at the buzzer had been a mere 3 inches to the left, it would have gone in, and Butler University’s Bulldogs would
be the national champions.

It would have gone down as the greatest moment—and victory—in the history of intercollegiate athletics.

Gordon Hayward, the baby-faced kid from Brownsburg, would have become a nationwide A-list sports celebrity.

Brad Stevens, the baby-faced coach from Zionsville, would have become a nationwide, A-list celebrity. Period.

And despite three national titles, 11 Final Four appearances and a stint as coach of a gold-medal-winning USA Olympic team,
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski would have received condemnation from the media for ordering his center, Brian Zoubek, to intentionally
miss a second free throw that left the Blue Devils with only a two-point lead and thus vulnerable to a miracle.

Ah, but the imagination beckons.

The shot goes in and the Raleigh-Durham newspaper runs a caricature of Krzyzewski portraying him as the devil with a target
on his forehead and “lose, lose, lose” doodled on his shirt.

The shot goes in and Bobby Plump has to close his restaurant when business dwindles after Hayward opens a spot down the street
in Broad Ripple. The place is called, “Gordon’s Longer Last Shot.”

The shot goes in and Hayward declares for the NBA, forcing the Indiana Pacers to bow to public pressure and trade Danny Granger,
Roy Hibbert and two future first-round draft choices to New Jersey for rights to pick Hayward ahead of Kentucky’s John
Wall.

The shot goes in and Matt Howard’s mustache is enshrined in the college basketball hall of fame.

The shot goes in and Bobby Fong is named NCAA president as the architect of the student-athlete ideal.

The shot goes in and plans to renovate Hinkle Fieldhouse are upgraded to include luxury suites, video screens, ribbon boards
and a separate practice facility.

The shot goes in and Purina Dog Chow signs Blue II as a celebrity endorser.

For dramatic effect, instead of a young, married man, Pizzo casts Stevens as a down-and-out retired pharmaceutical company
employee who has delayed his dream to coach for 35 years. And when he finally gets his chance, he finds himself at odds with
an attractive academic adviser who questions his motives.

A pivotal early scene depicts the fictional Hayward addressing the Butler faculty and saying, “If Supreme Court Justice
Roberts is allowed to speak, I stay. He goes, I go.”

The NCAA’s Greg Shaheen plays himself as he welcomes the Bulldogs to Lucas Oil Stadium.

And Bobby Plump plays Bobby Plump. Not even Hollywood can improve on the original.

In the pre-championship game pep talk, the actor portraying Matt Howard says, “Let’s win this one for all the
little schools that have two academic all-Americans and cumulative 3.0 or above GPAs who couldn’t get here.”

“Ollie” is brought back to play Zach Hahn. Or maybe Zach Hahn plays Ollie.

Hayward nearly misses the championship game because his professor won’t let him out of a night class.

And at the conclusion of the championship game, the Lucas Oil Stadium retractable roof opens and the Butler team ascends
into the sky via a golden escalator, waiting to be greeted by Butler coaching legend Tony Hinkle who intones, “I love
you guys.”

Benner is director of communications for the Indianapolis Convention & Visitors Association and a former sports columnist
for The Indianapolis Star. His column appears weekly. Listen to his column via podcast at www.ibj.com. He can be reached at
bbenner@ibj.com. Benner also has a blog, www.indyinsights.com.

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Sports columnist

Benner has written a sports column for Indianapolis Business Journal since February 2001. Before that he was a sportswriter and columnist for The Indianapolis Star for 33 years. Benner is a lifelong Hoosier and a graduate of Center Grove High School and Indiana University. In his day job, he serves as director of communications for the Indianapolis Convention & Visitors Association. His passions include skiing, golf, live music and serving on the board of Special Olympics Indiana.

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